• MudMan
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    383 months ago

    See, this is a tough one. Privacy concerns are legitimate, but also, when people keep reminding that Meta was a key player in acts of terror and genocide what is often not said is that a lot of it happened over Whatsapp groups and direct messages, as in India and Burkina Faso. Direct messaging apps are also social media.

    I don’t have a solution for this. It’s a mess of an issue and honestly, I don’t know that I trust anybody with a strong, aggressive position one way or the other.

    • @Blisterexe@lemmy.zip
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      53 months ago

      Its actually because telegram isnt encrypted, and the ceo didnt reply to takedown requests of cp and drug exchanges

    • @lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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      43 months ago

      Direct messaging apps are also social media.

      How do you define social media in a way that includes DMs but doesn’t include basically all communication?

      • @noli@lemm.ee
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        33 months ago

        One thing that has always felt different about Telegram in particular was the large, public groups. I’ve never used WhatsApp but you can’t really get the same virality on something like Signal or plain SMS/RCS/etc. If you can widely share “rich” media, it kinda fits the bill for social media imo.

    • @kirk781@discuss.tchncs.de
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      33 months ago

      I think 30+ people died directly in India due to fake message rumors on WhatsApp last year. The rumours were basically of child kidnapping rings doing the rounds and if someone new wandered in into a secluded community, they would be suspected and in rare cases, killed. Since India saw an exceptional implosion in smartphone usage in recent years and WhatsApp is the most popular messaging platform there, it’s a travesty that it happened.